BIM47785 - Specific deductions: travel and subsistence: cars - restriction of hiring costs: hire periods beginning before 1/6 April 2009: calculation
S48-S50 Income Tax (Trading and Other Income) Act 2005, S578A, S578B Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988
This guidance applies to expenditure incurred on hiring cars where the hire period began before 1 April 2009 for Corporation Tax purposes and 6 April 2009 for Income Tax purposes. See BIM47775 for the election to apply the rules described in this guidance where the hire period begins on or after 1/6 April 2009 but before 1/6 April 2010.
The restriction
The allowable element of the 鈥榬ent鈥 for the car is restricted to:
Expenditure x (拢12,000 + P) / 2P
where P is the retail price of the car when new.
The expenditure can be wider than just the actual rent. It includes any element of unrelievable VAT.
In Britax International GmbH v CIR [2002] 74TC662, Parker LJ said at paragraph 72:
鈥業 also bear in mind that the concept of 鈥渆xpenditure鈥 is wide enough to include payments which may not strictly be regarded as rentals.鈥
Example
Company E rents a car. The car has a retail price when new of 拢20,000 and the company pays a rent of 拢5,000 a year. The company recognises that they have to restrict the amount of relief claimed. The allowable rent is limited to:
拢5,000 x (拢12,000 + 拢20,000) / (2 x 拢20,000) = 拢5,000 x 拢32,000 / 拢40,000 = 拢4,000.
The company has to restrict their claim to 拢4,000.
What is the retail price when new?
New cars are 鈥檜nused and not second hand鈥. A car can be accepted as unused and not second hand even if it has been driven a limited number of miles for the purposes of testing, delivery, test driven by a potential purchaser, or used as a demonstration car.
Following discussions with the British Vehicle and Rental Leasing Association, HMRC takes the view that where the lessee knows the actual price paid by the lessor for the car when new, this can be used as the retail price when new.
If the lessee does not know the price paid by the lessor then they should use the manufacturer鈥檚 list of suggested retail prices net of any discount available generally; that is, not just available to a particular group of customers or chain.
In either case, the price to be used is inclusive of extras, delivery and VAT.
This interpretation only applies to this rule. It does not affect other tax provisions on cars, including the benefit charges for employees, which use different definitions for the price of the car.
Maintenance agreements
If the rental agreement separately identifies charges for costs such as maintenance in the lease agreement, then these costs should be excluded. The restriction is only applied to the rental payment.
If there is an all-inclusive rental payment, which includes costs such as maintenance, then the whole of the payment is included as 鈥檈xpenditure鈥 when calculating the restriction.
Hire/lease purchase
If the car is held under a hire/lease purchase agreement where:
- ownership does not pass automatically at the end of the contract; and
- there is no purchase option or the price payable under a purchase option is more than one per cent of the retail price when new,
the restriction is applied to the allowable expense computed in accordance with the guidance at BIM45350 onwards.
The restriction applies to the total amount for which relief is claimed; that is, both the finance charge element and the 鈥檇epreciation鈥.
Rebates and reductions in rent
It is possible that after the amount of the rent allowable as a deduction has been restricted, a part of the rent is rebated or the amount of rent due is reduced.
In this situation the amount of the rebate or reduction in rent which is taxable is reduced by the same proportion as the rent was reduced.
Example
At the end of the lease, Company E in the example above received a rebate of 拢2,000. The allowable fraction of the rent was:
(拢12,000 + 拢20,000) / (2 x 拢20,000) = 4/5
Only 4/5 of the rebate (that is 4/5 x 拢2,000 = 拢1,600) is taxable.